The Shoulder
The Shoulder
64
plain-finch-007

Ran a 4-way stop (I think?) and got hit — cited at fault but I swear I stopped. What now?

I'm still kind of shaking writing this out. Accident happened a few days ago and I can't stop replaying it in my head.

Basically I was approaching a 4-way stop intersection, came to a stop, looked both ways, and pulled out. A truck coming through clipped the back half of my car pretty hard on the driver's side. Spun me partially into the curb. Airbags didn't deploy but my door is completely caved in.

Cops showed up, took statements from both of us, and apparently there was someone standing outside a nearby shop who saw the whole thing. Officer cited me for failure to yield. I have a court date in a few weeks. I genuinely believed I had enough time to clear the intersection — but I understand that's exactly what everyone says.

My car got towed to some lot and the fees are already ticking up daily. I have full coverage so I think collision applies, but I've never actually filed a claim before and I have no idea how this plays out when you're the one cited.

The things keeping me up at night:

  • Do I call my own insurance right now or wait to see if the other driver files first?
  • Will my insurance drop me or just raise my rates through the roof?
  • The tow lot situation — do I have to pay all that out of pocket even if I file a claim?
  • Could the citation get reduced or dismissed at court, and does that even change anything on the insurance side?
  • The other driver seemed fine on scene but mentioned their neck was "a little stiff" before they left. That comment is haunting me.

I'm not trying to dodge responsibility if I messed up. I just want to understand what I'm walking into. Any experience with this kind of situation would really help.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 13
    sharp-newt-995

    I was cited at fault in an intersection accident two years ago — also had a witness statement against me. First thing I did was call my own insurance and just report it. Didn't admit fault, didn't editorialize, just said 'I was in an accident and here's what happened.' They handled the whole process from there. The rate increase stung but it wasn't the apocalypse I imagined. Report it sooner rather than later — dragging your feet doesn't help.

  • 8
    bold-marten-354

    Please be really careful about what you say to the other driver's insurance if they call you. They WILL call you, probably soon, and they'll be friendly and sound like they just want to 'get your side of things.' Anything you say can be used to lock in fault and calculate their payout. You don't have to talk to them at all — your own insurer can handle that communication.

  • 11
    mellow-mole-301

    Former adjuster here. A few things worth knowing:

    1. A citation doesn't automatically mean 100% fault in insurance terms. Adjusters do their own liability investigation independent of the police report. That said, a citation + witness statement does make it harder to argue shared fault. 2. On the tow lot — call them TODAY and ask about a storage fee cap or release timeline. Some jurisdictions have rules on daily fees, but the lot doesn't advertise that. If your claim is filed and your car is deemed a total loss or approved for repair, the insurer sometimes covers storage from the loss date, but not always retroactively. 3. The 'stiff neck' comment is the thing I'd take seriously. Soft tissue claims can come in weeks later. Your liability coverage is what handles that, not your collision.

    • 12
      hearty-hare-117

      On the court date for the citation: it might be worth at least consulting with a traffic attorney before you go in. Sometimes citations like this can be amended to a non-moving violation through a plea, which matters for both your insurance rates and any civil liability picture. I'm not saying fight it if you're clearly at fault, but understanding your options before you just pay it and accept the record is smart. The outcome at traffic court and what your insurance does are separate tracks, but they can influence each other.

  • 22
    sharp-seal-904

    Just want to gently flag — you said you're still shaking a few days later. That's worth paying attention to. Adrenaline and stress after accidents can mask your own symptoms too. If anything feels off physically — neck stiffness, headaches, trouble sleeping beyond normal stress — don't brush it off. Get checked out. I've seen people 'feel fine' for a week and then suddenly have real issues that are harder to document because they waited.

  • 6
    curious-fox-244

    The 'neck is a little stiff' thing would have me stressed too, honestly. Hopefully they feel better and nothing comes of it, but it sounds like you're being thoughtful about this whole situation. Just make sure you're documenting everything — photos of the car, the intersection, any texts or communication. You'll want that later.

    • 3
      mellow-co-pilot389

      Thank you both, this gave me the push I needed to make the call.

    • 8
      honest-driver162

      Curious whether you did this on your own or had help with it.

  • 24
    clear-stoat-810

    Not legal advice, but I'll say this: if the other occupant later claims injury, your liability coverage is your protection — that's literally what it's there for. The more important question is whether your limits are adequate. If your bodily injury limits are low and there's a real injury claim, you could theoretically be exposed beyond the policy. If you have any reason to think this could escalate, talking to a PI attorney (most do free consultations) sooner rather than later gives you a clearer picture of your actual risk. Again, not legal advice — just context.

  • 5
    bright-owl-359

    Three things to do right now: (1) Call your insurance and report the claim — today, not tomorrow. (2) Call the tow lot and ask exactly what it costs per day and what you need to do to stop the bleeding on storage fees. (3) Don't post about this accident on any social media. Seriously, nothing. Everything else can wait a few days while you process, but those three can't.

    • 2
      gentle-parent782

      How long did it end up taking in your case?